A story of love, longing and jazz in 1960s Bombay
Chris Perry and Lorna Cordeiro. (Wikimedia Commons)
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Naresh FernandesMay 19, 2015 Quartz IndiaTheir eyes give it away. Chris Perry 
wears a slick black jacket, the sleeves of his crisp white shirt revealing the 
glint of dark cuff links. His fingers clasp a gleaming tenor saxophone with a 
lover’s gentleness. Arms crossed coquettishly above her waist, Lorna Cordeiro 
is chic in a bouffant and a form-fitting gown that shows a flash of ankle. They 
stare into each other’s eyes, mesmerised. Behind them looms a giant camera 
aperture borrowed from the opening sequence of the Bond films.You couldn’t miss 
the poster as you sauntered down Jamshetji Tata Road in downtown Bombay. It 
hung outside the Astoria Hotel, across the street from the octagonal Art Deco 
turret of Eros cinema, inviting the city to Chris and Lorna’s daily shows at 
the Venice nightclub. It was 1971. India was savouring its newfound place on 
the world’s stage. The country’s armed forces had decisively liberated 
Bangladesh and the idealism of Independence had welled up again. India’s middle 
classes were capturing their polyester memories on Agfa Click IIIs that cost 
46.50 rupees (taxes extra), aspiring to the lifestyles of “The Jet Set Air 
Hostesses” described in The Illustrated Weekly of India (price: 85 paise), and 
being encouraged by newspaper ads to “Go gay with Gaylord fine filter 
cigarettes”.As the City of Gold bubbled through its jazz age, Lorna and Chris 
enthralled Bombay with their shows at Venice each night. Remo Fernandes, who 
would go on to become the first Indian pop musician to record an album of 
original English-language tunes, was among those locked in the spell. “Two 
artists sometimes ignite a creative chemistry in each other which goes beyond 
all logical explanation. Mere mortals can only look and listen in awe,” he 
rhapsodised. “In such duos, one plus one does not make two. It makes a number 
so immeasurable, it defies all laws of calculus.”But the sparks that flew at 
Venice gradually built into a roaring conflagration. As Remo put it: 
“Hyper-intense, high-temperament artistic relationships often end in emotional 
disaster, like two comets when they steer too dangerously close. Chris’s and 
Lorna’s, as we all know, was no exception.”Like the myths about the city in 
which they soared to fame, the tale of Chris and Lorna has gained so much in 
the re-telling it’s sometimes difficult to thresh the apocrypha from the 
actual. Thirty years after the two stopped performing together, old-time 
musicians in the bylanes of Dhobi Talao and Bandra still beg anonymity as they 
reminisce in sad whispers.“He was shameless. He left his wife and three small 
children for that girl.”“Chris and Lorna were in love. When they fought, they 
became mortal enemies. He destroyed her and he destroyed himself.” “Chris and 
Lorna were in love…He destroyed her and he destroyed himself.” “She was very 
good singer. Beyond that, she was nothing. She got her break with Chris Perry. 
He made contract with her. She couldn’t sing without his permission. She had no 
brains, so she signed. Then he went back to his wife.”“He didn’t let her 
perform with anyone else. He threatened to break the legs of one Hindu fellow 
who tried to get her to sing with him.”“She hit the bottle, men. She became an 
alcoholic and just disappeared.”Chris Perry, who was born Pereira, died on 
January 25, 2002, his last years hobbled by Parkinson’s disease. Lorna has 
refused to recount her version of events for publication. But the fidelity of 
her contralto booming out of our speakers, embroidered with Chris’s perfectly 
crafted sax filigrees, speaks its own truth.* * *Dave Brubeck in Bombay.Ronnie 
Monserrate was 19 when he began to play Sunday gigs at Venice with the Chris 
Perry band, sitting in for the regular pianist. Venice had a reputation. It was 
the jazzman’s jazz haunt, the rendezvous for musicians from around the country 
and occasionally from around the world. Dave Brubeck swung by when he visited 
Bombay in 1958, as Duke Ellington had when his band set out on their famous 
world tour of 1963. As Ronnie tells it, the dapper Chris Perry was the 
musician’s musician: “He had perfect pitch. He was an arranger, a composer, a 
player.” Chris played both trumpet and saxophone, sometimes switching from one 
to the other mid-tune, a feat that required elaborate lip control. His trumpet 
tone was broad and true. He didn’t have flashy technique, but the notes he 
coaxed out of his horn had a mellowness that kept the fans coming back night 
after night.Chris was 43 at the time, Lorna was 25. No one seems quite sure 
exactly how they met, but everyone’s agreed that he groomed her into one of the 
Bombay’s finest crooners. One version maintains that Lorna got her break when 
still in school, after she won the Connie Francis soundalike competition at 
Metro cinema. This prompted a musician named Raymond Albuqerque to invite her 
to sing in his show at the Bandra Fair. Her rendition of Underneath the Mango 
Tree got the crowds so fired up that Chris Perry, already an established 
performer, went to her home to audition her. She was just 16 when she joined 
Perry’s band.A vocalist in the Shirley Bassey mould, Lorna belted out every 
tune like it was her last time on stage. “She had a lot of black feel,” is how 
Ronnie describes her performances. “You could see the intensity when she was on 
stage. She’d give it her best, every time. She was like a magnet. You couldn’t 
help but be attracted to her when she was on stage. And with Chris Perry band 
by her side, it was like magic happening. There was incredible attraction. 
There was a lot of love in the interaction. It was apparent in their body 
language. They brought out the best in each other. They’d look into each 
other’s eyes and their understanding was so great that there’d be spontaneous 
combustion.” “She was like a magnet. You couldn’t help but be attracted to her 
when she was on stage.” Offstage, though, things could get awkward. Any man 
attempting to talk to Lorna was liable to get a taste of Perry’s famously 
volatile fists. During breaks, the musicians would sit around their table, 
absolutely silent. “They were jolly people but they were afraid to laugh around 
Chris,” Ronnie says. Ronnie was the only exception, perhaps because his youth 
made him seem unthreatening. Two decades later, he’d find opportunity to call 
in that bond of trust.Venice was around the corner from Bombay’s swinging jazz 
strip, Churchgate Street (now Veer Nariman Road). Pianists, trios and quartets 
were to be heard all the way down the 200-metre thoroughfare as it led off from 
Churchgate station to the Arabian Sea. First came Berry’s, with tandoori butter 
chicken that was the stuff of Bombay legend and accomplished piano-fronted 
groups led by Dorothy Jones and Stanley Pinto. Across the fence was Bombelli’s, 
named after its Swiss owner, where a trio held sway as ad men sipped 
cappuccinos. Then came the Ambassador, where Toni Pinto’s quintet encapsulated 
Bombay’s diversity: the group had two Jews—a singer named Ephrim Elias and 
drummer Abie Cohen, an Anglo-Indian tenor saxophonist named Norman Mobsby, and, 
in addition to Pinto, another Goan, the bassist Clement Furtado.Pinto’s kingdom 
was named the Other Room, so called because after the rich and famous had 
finished drinking at the bar, they’d say, “Let’s go to the other room.” He 
ruled for 16 years from 1958, his sharply dressed group spinning out 
hard-driving bop and light classics, and playing back-up for cabarets and 
visiting acrobats, magicians and flamenco dancers. The Ambassador was owned by 
the cigar-chomping Jack Voyantzis, an ebullient Greek who was assisted by his 
brother, Socrates. The siblings had started their subcontinental journey in 
Rangoon, opened a café in Delhi, and finally found their way to Bombay, where 
they transformed a hotel known as the Argentinian into the Ambassador. The 
cream of Bombay society turned out to catch Toni’s tightly-rehearsed band. Toni 
remembers once looking up from his piano to see three of the city’s leading 
editors appreciatively tapping their feet: Rusi Karanjia, editor of the 
left-wing tabloid Blitz, D F Karaka, editor of the rival Current, and Frank 
Moraes, editor of the Indian Express, with his American girlfriend. Another 
time, as the band was going through its routine, Toni realised that someone 
from the back of the room was playing along on a trumpet. It turned out to be 
British hornman Eddie Calvert. “He came for dinner one night even though he was 
staying at the Ritz,” Toni says, and he asked his drummer, Bobby Hadrian, to go 
back and get his instrument. Calvert and Toni’s band jammed for an hour, 
playing the tunes the American had made famous:Cherry Pink, Begin the Beguine, 
Wonderland by Night.Elsewhere on Churchgate Street, music spilled out through 
the doors of the Napoli, The Talk of the Town and Gaylord’s. Opposite Venice, 
there was jazz at the Ritz, while at the Little Hut, Neville Thomas led a group 
calling itself Three Guys and a Doll. Past Flora Fountain stood Bistro and 
Volga, home to a quartet led by the grandfatherly baritone saxophonist Hecke 
Kingdom.Dave Brubeck was impressed enough by the local musicians to attempt to 
make some recordings with them during his visit. But Bombay defeated him. He 
later recounted the episode to an interviewer: “The current fluctuated in 
Bombay in those days and so the tape would speed up and slow down. Like, when 
you were shaving, the speed of the motor would go up and down. It ruined one of 
my favourite tapes I’ve ever made.” Another visiting jazzman, the pianist 
Hampton Hawes, was overwhelmed by problems that were rather more basic. “Bombay 
turned me around,” he wrote. “I’d never seen poverty before.” Art, he decided, 
was irrelevant amidst the gnawing deprivation. “Here I was thinking about 
making a big splash, a hit record, going home a hero, and I’m walking the 
streets with motherfuckers who don’t even know what a piece of bread is, let 
along Stravinsky or Charlie Parker. If Bird was alive and played for them they 
wouldn’t be able to hear him because they’d be too damn hungry.” Jazz had 
always been the preserve of Bombay’s elite. But while the audiences were upper 
crust, the musicians were not. Admittedly, jazz had always been the preserve of 
Bombay’s elite. But while the audiences were upper crust, the musicians who 
cooked up the syncopated rhythms were not. Like Toni Pinto, Ronnie Monserrate, 
Chris and Lorna, the majority were Roman Catholics strivers from the former 
Portuguese colony of Goa, 550 kilometres south of Bombay. They’d been an 
important part of the Bombay music scene since the 1920s, when Bombay began to 
develop its appetite for what was then called “hot music”. Jazz had made its 
way from New Orleans in the waxy grooves of phonograph records and travelled 
over the oceans with touring American bands that played for the administrators 
of the Raj. Bombay’s first jazz concerts were performed at the Bandstand, south 
of the Oval. Among the earliest jazzmen to play an extended stint in Bombay was 
Leon Abbey, a violinist from Minnesota, who led an eight-piece band at the Taj 
during the 1935-’36 season. Abbey wore white tails on stage and played the 
freshest sounds. He told one interviewer, “I kept up with the latest numbers 
because someone would always come up to the bandstand and say, ‘Old Bean, would 
you play so and so…’, because as far as he was concerned, we should know how to 
playeverything that had ever been written.” Midway through the trip, the Taj 
management sent Abbey and saxophonist Art Lanier back to New York to pick up 
the latest music.Abbey’s outfit was replaced by the Symphonians, fronted by the 
cornet player Cricket Smith. Smith had been featured on the seminal recordings 
made by James Reese Europe’s Society Orchestra in 1913 and 1914, capturing jazz 
at the moment of its transition from the relatively unsophisticated ragtime 
style. Smith “signed his contract for a fixed amount of money and two Coronas a 
day, so every day, the manager would have to bring him his cigars”, recalls 
Luis Moreno, a Spanish trumpet player who lived in Bombay for 20 years. “He was 
a character.”Teddy Weatherford’s integrated band at the Taj Mahal Hotel.In 
1938, pianist Teddy Weatherford, who had played with Louis Armstrong, took the 
stage with his men. His swinging style and treble voicing had been an important 
influence on jazz during its formative years. The Taj, it would seem, wasn’t 
quite the genteel venue it now is—not at least from the way Weatherford’s 
occasional Russian bassist named ‘Innocent Nick’ described the gigs to the jazz 
magazineStoryville.“Teddy used to play downstairs, in the Tavern of the Taj, 
for the soldiers, sailors and others, a very rough place,” Nick said. “Teddy 
would play for hours without a break. Even with drinks, he would continue 
one-handed. He had tremendous hands.”For the African-American musicians, Bombay 
provided refuge from the apartheid in the U.S. Men like Weatherford and his 
sidemen, such as the saxophonist Roy Butler, spent long years shuttling between 
Europe and the subcontinent, where racial barriers seemed non-existent, at 
least for them. Butler’s years in India as a Weatherford sideman, he 
toldStoryville, were among his happiest—the work was relatively easy, the pay 
and conditions good, he was treated splendidly by both management and 
clientele, and enjoyed the luxurious life under the British Raj. The Taj 
management, on its part, honoured Weatherford by naming a dish after him: 
Poires Glace Weatherford. (The absence of colour prejudice was only to be 
expected. After all, industrial baron Jamshetji Tata was moved to build the Taj 
after being prevented one leisurely Bombay evening from dining at the 
Europeans-only Pyrke’s Apollo Hotel. Later, he famously hung a notice in the 
Taj forbidding entry to South Africans and dogs.)Weatherford’s sidemen were an 
eclectic lot and opened Bombay’s ears to a wealth of new sounds, the Cuban 
drumming of Luis Pedroso and the Spanish brass of Luis Moreno, among them. 
Butler, who was known as the Reverend in acknowledgement of his abstemious 
ways, helped Weatherford drill the band. Moreno characterised Butler as the 
“gentleman of the orchestra”. Moreno added, “He never drank in his life and if 
someone said, ‘How about a round of drink?’ Roy would say, ‘I’ll have an 
ice-cream. You enjoy beer, I enjoy ice-cream.” Butler went on to lead his own 
band at Greens, located where the Taj Intercontinental now stands.Both 
Weatherford (who married an Anglo-Indian woman, before dying of cholera in 
Calcutta in 1945, aged 41) and Butler recruited Goan sidemen, plugging Bombay 
into the source of jazz. The trumpet player Frank Fernand, who played in 
Weatherford band with his Goan compatriots, Micky Correa and Josique Menzies, 
says that his stint with the American taught him to “play like a negro”. Moreno 
helped Fernand develop the ability to hit long, high notes, eventually 
extending his range up to E flat. Butler, it must be noted, was less than 
thrilled with his Goan employees. “My short stretch as a bandleader in India 
was not too earth-shaking,” he told Storyville. “The local musicians were not 
too familiar with jazz at that time. I understood that there are some very good 
jazzmen out there now, but the time was too short for anything to develop, good 
or bad.” For their part, some of the Goan musicians weren’t overly impressed 
with Butler, either. They believed his decision to stay in India was motivated 
by the fear that he wouldn’t find work in the US. As Fernand put it, “The faltu 
fellows stayed, the good ones went home.”The Mickey Correa band.But by the 
’40s, Bombay’s swing bands had earned a solid reputation. After listening to 
Mickey Correa and Frank Fernand play their hearts out the wind section in the 
outfit fronted by Rudy Cotton (a Parsi who had been born Cawasji Khatau), one 
contemporary correspondent wrote that “the band really jumped, just another 
bunch of righteous boys who helped to prove, if proof were needed, that this 
jazz of ours has developed into an international language”.* * *Both Lorna and 
Chris lived on the edges of a precinct of cemeteries known as Sonapur—the City 
of Gold. Lorna lives to the south of Sonapur, in Guzder House in the Dhobi 
Talao neighbourhood. When the wind blows east, her starkly furnished room is 
filled with the aroma of hot mawa cakes and fluffy buns being unloaded from the 
ovens in Kayani’s bakery next door. In the narrow corridors of Guzder House, 
even whispers carry clear down the hallway, and the mundane details of Lorna’s 
spats with Chris became common knowledge. “He was a big gambler,” one neighbour 
recalls. “He’d come in a car and say, “Lorna, give me 5,000 rupees.’ She’d go 
to the bank and withdraw it. All her savings were wiped out.” “His daily 
routine when he woke up was to first smoke a cigarette and then blow his 
trumpet.” Chris lived to the north of Sonapur, opposite the church of Sao 
Francis Xavier in Dabul. Once he got home, he became a strict but caring 
father. “He was very religious,” his eldest son Giles told one interviewer. “We 
had to recite the Rosary at 8 every evening. At 12 noon and at dusk, we had to 
say the Angelus. If the phone ran during prayers he would say, ‘Throw the phone 
out.’” Miles, another of Chris Perry’s sons, described his father’s devotion to 
his art. “His daily routine when he woke up was to first smoke a cigarette and 
then blow his trumpet. Only then would he go for a wash.” His son Errol added: 
“He always had his favourite instrument close to him. Even while he slept, the 
trumpet would be on one side and mummy on the other.”The neighbourhood in which 
Lorna and Chris lived had long been the focus of Catholic migrants from Goa. 
The first significant numbers of Goan migrants came to Bombay in 1822, liberal 
partisans fleeing political persecution in the Portuguese colony for the safety 
of British India. More followed in 1835 after a rebellion by mixed-race 
mestizos deposed Goa’s first native-born governor general, Bernardo Peres da 
Silva. The mestizos launched a two-year reign of terror, forcing da Silva’s 
supporters into exile. As the century progressed, Goan emigration to Bombay 
swelled. The Portuguese hadn’t been especially attentive to developing 
industries, so the pressure on cultivable land was intense. Adding to this, 
many Goans chafed under the oppression of the bhatkars, as the feudal landlords 
were known. By the 1920s, many Goan men were being employed as seamen by such 
British lines as BI, P&O, Anchor and Clan. They used Bombay as a base between 
their voyages. Other Goans found work as domestic helpers in British households 
and social institutions. The early Goan fortune-seekers were almost all male: 
The arduous overland journey from Goa to Bombay, which took between 10 and 15 
days, discouraged women. But the opening of the rail line between territories 
in April 1881 changed that. By the 1930s, Goans in Bombay had come to be 
associated with the ABC professions: they were ayahs (maids), butlers and 
cooks. In a column titled Random Jottings published by the Anglo-Lusitanian 
Journal in 1931, a writer calling himself Atropos noted that of the 37,000 
Goans resident in Bombay that year, 14,000 were seamen, 7,000 were cooks or 
waiters and 3,000 were ayahs. A full 700 were estimated to be musicians. (At 
least 7,000 Goans were unemployed.)The neighbourhoods around Sonapur began to 
fill up with Goan dormitories known as coors, a word that derived from the 
Portuguesecuadd or room. These were established by individual villages back in 
Goa to provide a home away from home for their neighbours who were too poor to 
maintain two residences, one in the village and the other in the city. By 1958, 
half of the estimated 80,000 Goans in Bombay lived in such quarters—which were 
now being called “clubs”, adopting the word used to describe the chummeries 
many firms had established for their single European employees, writes Olga 
Valladares in her 1958 thesis titledThe Coor System—a study of Goan club life 
in Bombay. As you walk down the narrow lanes of the neighbourhoods around 
Sonapur today, you can see fading signboards for them everywhere: the Boa Morte 
Association (Club of Majorda); St Anne’s Club of Ponda; Fatradicares Club; The 
Original Grand Club of Pombura; Nossa Senhora dos Milagres, Club of Sangrem. 
There were 341 Goan clubs in the city in 1958, mainly between Dhobi Talao and 
Dabul. The seamen who lived in them found it easy from there to get to the 
docks and the shipping offices, while the cooks and domestics were within 
walking distance of the produce sellers at Crawford Market, where their chores 
began before they moved on to their employer’s establishments each day.Life in 
the clubs was spartan. Residents were allowed minimal baggage, usually a big 
trunk. “Life was lived out of the box and on it,” Valladares says. The 
club-dweller’s box “is not only the repository of all personal possessions, his 
wardrobe and his safe, but it is his dining table at mealtimes and his bed at 
night.” The altar was the centrepiece of the club. In addition to statues of 
Christ and Mary, they contained icons of the patron saint of the village, 
decorated with offerings of flowers. Every evening, members were required to 
gather around the altar to say the Rosary. The highlight of the year was the 
celebration in exile of the village feast. Collections were taken up and, after 
Mass, there was an elaborate meal, followed by musical performances.The music, 
old-timers recall, was superb. After all, the musical talents of Goans had 
earned the community a formidable reputation throughout the subcontinent. The 
Portuguese may have neglected higher education in Goa, but the parochial 
schools first established in 1545 put into place a solid system of musical 
training. As early as 1665, a Goan choir performed an oratorio by Giacome 
Carissimi in seven voices at the Basilica of Bom Jesu. The recital caused such 
a sensation, it led the Carmelite musician Guiseppe di Santa Maria to declare, 
“I feel I am in Rome.” The clash of civilisations in Goa created a whole range 
of syncretic forms: the Goa sausage was a Portuguese chorizo with a 
tear-inducing splash of Indian spice; cashew feni was drunk in a leisurely 
Iberian manner after sundown; and the mando—the only harmonised folk musical 
form on the subcontinent—melded saudade, the nostalgic melancholy that pervades 
Portuguese fado, with Indian folk melodies. Transgressing subcontinental norms, 
the mando was the accompaniment for social dancing between the sexes; as the 
musicians crooned their songs of yearning, couples struck up delicate postures 
of stylised courtship.Their musical inclination came in handy when Goans sought 
work in British India. They soon established themselves as the musicians of the 
Raj, staffing the orchestras established by British administrators and by 
Indian maharajahs seeking to appear sophisticated. In Bombay, Goan musicians 
took over both ends of the music business. In 1888, The Times of India mentions 
a Goan ensemble playing in the Bombay Philharmonic Orchestra in the Town Hall. 
Other Goan groups are said to have displaced the Muslim street bands that 
played at the weddings of the common folk and other festive occasions. Salvador 
Pinto, who played coronet in the Volunteer Corps, is thought to have formed the 
first proper street band, writes Bombay local historian Dr Teresa Albuquerque. 
She says that the demand for Goan musicians was so great, one ingenious man 
named Francisco Menezes trawled through the clubs to find unemployed men to 
march in the processions, instructing them to inflate their cheeks without 
blowing a note. Dhobi Talao’s Goans were prominent not only as musicians but 
also in the city’s musical instrument trade. L M Furtado opened his store in 
Jer Mahal, around the corner from where Lorna lives, in the 1920s, importing 
pianos and violins that had been tropicalised to keep them from warping in the 
Bombay swelter. Marques and Company was nearby.Goan musicians also conjured up 
soundscapes for the silent films. Bombay’s Watson’s Hotel had been host to 
India’s first cinema screening on July 7, 1896, a show that advertised itself 
as “living photographic pictures in life-sized reproductions by Messrs Lumiere 
Brothers”. By New Year’s day in 1900, the Tivoli Theatre was screening 25 
pictures, with music by a string band. A portrait photographer named 
Harishchandra Sakharam Bhatavdekar became the first Indian to import a 
motion-picture camera from London and he shot a wrestling match between two 
well-known musclemen in 1897. Other locally shot films followed, including 
Alibaba, Hariraj and Buddha by a Bengali named Hiralal Sen. A creative 
flashback projects the tantalising image of Bombay audiences drinking in 
black-and-white scenes from Indian folktales as a Goan string quartet trots out 
phrases from Mozart and snatches of mandos, varying the tempo to match the 
action on screen. Goans have stayed in the picture ever since. For a Goan 
jazzman, the greatest accolade was to be told that he “played like a negro.” 
When jazz swung into the subcontinent, Goans seized it as the song of their 
souls. “Jazz gave us freedom of expression,” explains Frank Fernand, who played 
in the Teddy Weatherford band at the Taj. “You played jazz the way you 
feel—morning you play differently, evening you play differently.” New tunes 
came to India as sheet music, but that sometimes wasn’t much help even to 
accomplished readers: jazz contained such unconventional instructions as 
glissando, mute and attack. “But when we heard the records, we knew how to play 
the notes,” Frank says. For a Goan jazzman, the greatest accolade was to be 
told that he “played like a negro.” No one seems to have received more praise 
on this account than Chic Chocolate, who occasionally led a two-trumpet barrage 
at the Green’s Hotel with Chris Perry. Chic—whose name Goans pronounced as if 
they were talking about a rooster’s offspring—was known as the “Louis Armstrong 
of India.” His stratospheric trumpet notes and his growly scatting were a 
tribute to his New Orleans idol. “He had a negro personality,” Frank Fernand 
marvels. “He played everything by heart.” His stage presence was unforgettable. 
As the band reached a crescendo, Chic would fall on one knee and raise his horn 
to the stars.Chic Chocolate with Mohammed Rafi, C Ramchandra and Lata 
Mangeshkar.Chic had been born Antonio Xavier Vaz in Aldona in 1916. His mother 
wanted him to be a mechanic and earn a respectable living, but he dreamt of a 
life in music. He started out with a group called the Spotlights and, by 1945, 
his own outfit, Chic and the Music Makers, beat out 12 other bands to win a 
contract at Green’s, which also was owned by the Taj. The pianist Johnny 
Fernandes, who later married Chic’s daughter, Ursula, remembers the stir the 
trumpet player caused when he played at parties in Dhobi Talao homes. He says, 
“People would flock to see him as if he was a (movie) hero.” To have Chic 
perform at a wedding or a christening was a matter of prestige, but it could 
bump up the catering expenses. “You’d have hordes of gatecrashers coming to 
hear him,” Johnny explains. Chic, his contemporaries say, not only played like 
a negro, he even looked like one.The swarthiness of some Goan jazz musicians, 
such as the saxophonist Joe Pereira, came from ancestors with roots in 
Portugal’s African colonies of Mozambique and Angola. But Chic’s dark skin is 
attributed by one musician to his being a Mahar, a member of an untouchable 
caste. Many of Bombay’s jazzmen, this musician says, were drawn from this 
caste. As he theorised: “In Goa, Mahars were grave diggers. They’d also play 
snare drums and blow conches in funeral bands. When they came to Bombay, they 
became good jazz drummers and trumpet players.”They say Chic performed one of 
his greatest feats of improvisation offstage. “Chic lived in Marine Lines and 
had a girlfriend called Catherine, with whom he had a son,” a matter that 
shocked conservative Catholic sensibilities, one musician recalls. “But then he 
decided to marry another girl. The wedding was to be the Wodehouse Road 
Cathederal in Colaba. But Catherine landed up there with her son, so the 
wedding was shifted hastily to Gloria Church in Byculla”, across town. The 
befuddled guests waited patiently in the Colaba church, even as Chic said “I 
do” in the deserted neo-Gothic nave of Gloria church.Many early Goan jazzmen 
were sideman in Micky Correa’s band, which played at the Taj from 1939 to 1961. 
Among them was Ronnie Monserrate’s father, Peter, who was known as the “Harry 
James of India”. Peter’s five sons formed Bombay’s second-generation of Goan 
jazzmen: Joe and Bosco play trumpet and fluegelhorn, Blasco the trombone, Rex 
the drums and Ronnie the piano. The family lived in Abu Mansion, an apartment 
block in the textile mill district of Parel. The boys would come home from 
school at four and begin to practice, each having been allotted a two-hour slot 
by their father. The music would continue late into the night, then 
occasionally start again in the wee hours when Peter Monserrate and his 
gang—violinist Joe Menezes, trombone player Anibal Castro, drummer Leslie 
Godinho and Chic Chocolate—returned from a drink after work to demand an 
impromptu performance. As their mother cooked up a meal, the Monserrate boys 
would go through their paces. Their neighbours, mainly working-class Hindus, 
tolerated this with fortitude. Ronnie surmises, “I suppose it’s like living 
next to the railway tracks. After a while, you get immune to the roar of the 
trains if you want to get any sleep.”Activity in the Monserrate household would 
get especially hectic just before the biennale Sound of Surprise talent shows 
that the Bombay Musicians’ Association organised on the Sunday in November 
closest to the feast of St Cecilia, the patron saint of musicians. Bombay’s 
hottest swing bands took to the Birla theatre’s revolving stage to compete for 
the Franz Marques award for best original composition. Even though Peter 
Monserrate rehearsed his band hard in the corridors of Abu Mansion, his group 
never managed to win the trophy. His friend, Chris Perry, won in 1964, the 
first year it was given out. Toni Pinto took the award home in 1966 for Forever 
True, a gentle bossa nova tune that leapt out at him late one night as he 
travelled home in a cab. With only the bulb above the meter for light, he 
scribbled the theme down on the back of a matchbox.Goan musicians who didn’t 
play the nightclubs mainly worked at weddings, Parsi navjote initiation 
ceremonies and Catholic funerals. For many, finding a job for the evening meant 
taking a trip to Alfred’s, the Irani restaurant on Princess Street, midway 
between Chris’s home and Lorna’s apartment. Tony Cyril, Dennis Vaz, Johnny 
Rodriges, Johnny Baptista, Mike Machado and Chris Perry—the major bandleaders 
each had a regular table at which they’d slurp up endless cups of milky chai. 
“You’d come there every morning and hang around there as a routine,” says 
Johnny Fernandes, Chic Chocolate’s son-in-law. People who wanted to liven up 
their parties would land up at Alfred’s and approach one or the other leader. 
The cry would go up: one bass player needed. Two trumpets and one piano. “Once 
you got your assignment, you’d go home to get suit and head out to the venue,” 
Johnny says. It paid to be sharply turned out: in addition to their 15 rupee 
fee, musicians got three extra rupees for dressing up in a white jacket and 
black trousers.* * *When Bollywood films are beamed through their melodramatic 
prism of stock characters and broad stereotypes, Catholics emerge as not being 
quite Indian. They speak a mangled Hindi patois with Anglicised accents. 
They’re dolled up in Western clothes. The men are given to wearing climatically 
inappropriate jackets and felt hats. Unlike Hindus who knock back the 
occasional glass of something in bars, Catholic men tipple at home, as their 
wives and children look on. Still, they’re genial drunks, unthreatening 
sidekicks to the hero. Often, their role as sideman was literal: The screen 
musicians backing the hero as he performs that nightclub sequence that seemed 
mandatory in every Hindi film shot in the ’50s answer to names like George and 
Sidney and Michael. As for Catholic women, they never wear saris and their 
immodest legs show out from under their frocks. Older Catholic women, often 
called Mrs Sequeira or Mrs D’Souza, are landladies or kindly neighbours offer 
the hero consolation when he is temporarily stymied in his pursuit of the loved 
one. But younger Catholic women (with notable exceptions) are danger incarnate. 
They smoke. They have boyfriends to whom their parents don’t object. They dance 
in nightclubs and lure men to their doom with their promise of a world in which 
the sexes interact more freely, in which arranged marriages aren’t the norm, in 
which love isn’t taboo. In the end, though, the Catholic characters have only 
minor roles, a reflection of their lives at the margins of Indian society.The 
bit parts in which Catholics found themselves cast on screen weren’t an 
accurate portrayal of the vital role Goans played the Hindi film industry. 
Until the ’80s, India had no pop music save for Hindi film songs. Millions 
memorised and hummed the compositions of C Ramachandra, Shankar and Jaikishan, 
Laxmikant and Pyrelal and S D Burman, whose names rolled by in large letters at 
the beginning of the movies. But the Sound of India actually was created by 
Goan musicians, men whose names flickered by in small type under the 
designation “arranger.” It’s clear. The Hindi film classics that resound across 
the subcontinent and in Indian homes around the world wouldn’t have been made 
without Goans. Their dominance of the Hindi film world is partly a function of 
the structural differences between Indian and Western music. Indian classical 
music is melodic. The ragas that form the basis of Indian music are unilinear, 
each instrument or vocalist exploring an independent line. To move an audience, 
film scores must be performed by orchestras, with massed instruments playing in 
harmony. Only Goans, with their training in Western music, knew how to produce 
what was required.Frank Fernand at a film recording.Frank Fernand was among the 
first Goans in Bollywood and assisted such worthies as Anil Biswas, Hemant 
Kumar and Kishore Kumar. As he describes it, the men who composed the scores 
for Hindi films couldn’t write music and had no idea of the potential of the 
orchestras they employed. They would come to the studio and sing a melody to 
their Goan amanuensis, or pick out the line on a harmonium. The Goan assistant 
would write it out on sheet paper, then add parts for the banks of strings, the 
horn sections, the piano and the percussion. But the assistant wasn’t merely 
taking dictation: It was his job to craft the introductions and bridges between 
verse and chorus. Drawing from their bicultural heritage and their experience 
in the jazz bands, the Goans gave Bollywood music its promiscuous charm, 
slipping in slivers of Dixieland stomp, Portuguese fados, Ellingtonesque 
doodles, cha cha cha, Mozart and Bach themes. Then they would rehearse the 
orchestras, which were staffed almost entirely by Goans. After all, hardly 
anyone else knew how to play these Western instruments. To Frank Fernand, the 
music directors were mere subcontractors, men whose main job was liaising with 
the financiers. “We arrangers did all the real work. They’d show off to the 
directors and producers and try to show that they were indispensable. But to be 
a music director, salesmanship was more important than musicianship.”Chic 
Chocolate spent his mornings assisting C Ramachandra, who is popularly credited 
with having introduced swing into Bollwood. But tunes like Ina Mina Dika and 
Gori Gori (inspired by the mambo standardTico Tico) bear Chic’s unmistakable 
signature. His stamp is also audible on the throbbing Cuban percussion opening 
of Shola Jo Bhadke, a tune from Albela. Chic and the Music Makers made a brief 
appearance in the film to perform the tune, clad in an Indian wardrobe 
director’s frilly Latinesque fantasy. Cawas Lord’s conga beats out the 
introduction and hands clap clave. Chic smiles broadly at the camera in the 
best Satchmo tradition.Among the most reputed arrangers in Bollywood was the 
venerable Sebastian D’Souza, who did his best-known work with the duo of 
Shankar and Jaikishan between 1952 and 1975. “His arrangements were so 
brilliant, composers would take snatches of his background scores and work them 
into entire tunes,” says Merlin D’Souza, Sebastian’s daughter-in-law and a 
rising Bollywood music assistant herself. Sebastian had a brush with the film 
world in pre-Partition Lahore, where he led a band at Stiffle’s hotel. His 
earliest arrangements were for Lollywood composers Shyam Sundar and Mohammed 
Ali, recalls the saxophonist Joe Pereira. Joe was Sebastian’s cousin, and had 
been adopted as a 14-year-old by his older relative. Joe would spend his 
mornings taking music lessons from Sebastian, then take him his tiffin in the 
afternoon when Sebastian took a break from rehearsals. After 1947, Sebastian 
made his way to Bombay, but found that there was a glut of bandleaders in the 
hotels. He called on his Lollywood contacts and made his way to the film 
recording studios, where he got a break with O P Nayyar. The first tune he 
arranged was Pritam aan milo, which was sung by C H Atma in 1955. Merlin, who 
occasionally accompanied her father-in-law to the studios, remembers him 
walking around with a pencil tucked behind his ear. He devised a system of 
notation that incorporated the microtones that characterised Indian melodies. 
Sebastian was highly regarded by his musicians for his ever-generous nature. He 
often lent musicians money to buy better instruments or tide over a crisis. His 
contemporaries also remember him for the patience he showed even 
less-than-dexterous musicians. Merlin says that Sebastian was willing to give 
anyone a break. “Even if you played the viola haltingly, you’d find a place 
there, on the back row,” she says.That proved the lifeline for many Goan 
musicians, who, by the mid-70s, increasingly were being thrown out of work as 
Bombay’s nightclub scene went into decay. A more rigorous enforcement of the 
prohibition act and a crippling tax on establishments featuring live music kept 
patrons away. Besides, rock and roll was changing musical tastes and Bombay was 
developing the ear for beat groups. The film studio, which until then had been 
a source of supplementary income, suddenly became everyone’s main job. But the 
relatively simply Hindi film music Goan musicians were forced to play ate them 
away. “Their passion was to play jazz and big band,” Ronnie Monserrate says. 
“This was their bread and butter but they didn’t enjoy it. They were really 
frustrated. That’s probably why so many of them became alcoholics.” It took 
only four or five hours to record each tune. Musicians would be paid at the end 
of each shift, so they’d grab their money and head out for a drink. Few 
actually cared to see the movies in which they’d performed.Chris Perry also had 
a stint in the film studios, assisting Khayyam and working with such names as 
Lakshmikant and Pyarelal, R D Burman and Kalyanji Anandji. He eventually was 
emboldened to produce his own film. Bhuiarntlo Munis (The Man from the Caves) 
was the first colour film to be made in Konkani,the language spoken along the 
west coast between southern Maharashtra and northern Karnataka, and which is 
the mother tongue of most Goans. Chris wrote the story, the music and the 
lyrics. It starred Ivo Almedia, Helen Pereira and C Alvares, who had gained 
prominence for their work in tiatr, as Goa’s satirical musical theatre is 
known. The film was based on The Count of Monte Cristo, a tale that has great 
resonance in Goa because one of the characters, Abbe Faria, who in the Dumas 
novel is described as an Italian priest, in real life had been born in 
Candolim, in Goa, in 1756. Father Jose Custodio de Faria is acknowledged as 
having been among the earliest protagonists of scientific hypnotism, and a 
statue of him stands prominently in Goa’s capital, Panjim. The priest, who 
moved to Lisbon, was forced to flee to France in 1787 when a rebellion he had 
been associated with in Goa was crushed. The Conjuracao dos Pintos, the 
conspiracy of the Pinto family, was the first Asian struggle that aimed to 
replace European colonial rule with an independent state on the European model. 
That’s how Dumas came to meet the man he knew as “the black Portuguese.”Abbe 
Faria threw himself into the vortex of the French Revolution, was imprisoned 
and died of a stroke in 1819. In the Dumas novel, Abbe Faria takes it upon 
himself to educate the hero, Dantes, when the two are unjustly imprisoned in 
the French version of Alcatraz for 14 years. Dantes escapes, transforms himself 
into the Count of Monte Cristo and destroys his enemies. When the novel was 
published in 1844, it earned the Vatican’s ire because the tale was seen to 
propagate the un-Christian impulse of revenge. But as the trumpeter Frank 
Fernand points out, it seemed like an entirely appropriate subject for Chris 
Perry, the man whose quick temper was the stuff of popular lore.* * *One April 
evening in 1966, the Goan pop musician Remo Fernandes, barely a teenager then, 
strolled down to Panjim’s Miramar beach to take the air on the esplanade. All 
Panjim society, high and low, was there too. “There, decked up in our 
over-flared bell bottoms, we checked out the chicks dolled up in what we all 
thought were mini skirts—after all they did reach a full quarter of an inch 
above the knee,” Remo recalls. Keeping an eye on the younger folk, clumps of 
parents sat on the green wooden benches on the esplanade, “running a commentary 
on whose son had gone off with whose daughter for a walk along the sea”.From a 
kiosk on the beach, a pretty lady named Bertinha played records on the speaker 
system provided by the Panjim Municipality. She had a weakness for Cliff 
Richard tunes, Remo says. But that evening, she spun out a song called Bebdo 
(Drunkard). Miramar Beach was hypnotised. “The Panjim citizenry stopped in its 
tracks, the sunken sun popped up for another peep, the waves froze in mid-air,” 
Remo has written. “What manner of music was this, as hep as hep can be, hitting 
you with the kick of a mule on steroids? What manner of voice was this, 
pouncing at you with the feline power of a jungle lioness? And—hold it—no, it 
couldn’t be—yes, it was—no—was it really? Was this amazing song in 
Konkani?”Bebdo had been recorded a few months earlier by Chris Perry and Lorna 
in a Bombay studio and released by HMV. The jacket bore the flirty image that 
would later hang outside the Venice nightclub. The 45 rpm record had four 
tracks, opening with the rock-and-rolling Bebdo and ending on the flip side 
with the dreamy ballad, Sopon. “Sophisticated, westernised urban Goa underwent 
a slow-motion surge of inexplicable emotions: the disbelief, the wonder, the 
appreciation, and then finally a rising, soaring and bubbling feeling of 
pride,” Remo says. “The pride of being Goan. The pride of having a son of the 
soil produce such music. Of having a daughter of the soil sing it thus. And, 
most of all, of hearing the language of the soil take its rightful place in 
popular music after a period of drought. Chris and Lorna had come to stay.”It 
isn’t as if there hadn’t been Konkani records before. HMV released its first 
Konkani tunes in 1927. The earliest records had been made by Anthony Toloo, Joe 
Luis, L. Borges, Kid Boxer and Miguel Rod, all of them cantarists from the 
tiatr world. But by the ’60s, Konkani song had grown creaky and old fashioned. 
The melodies often were copied from western songs and the lyrics, for the most, 
were banal. Konkani songs, he says “were predictable to a fault—you could 
whistle the next line and anticipate the next chord change on the very first 
hearing. Add to that a few wrong notes from two inevitable trumpets and modest 
recording quality.” Chris Perry’s tunes shattered the mould. They married the 
sophistication of swing with the earthiness of the Goan folk song. Chris 
Perry’s tunes shattered the mould. They married the sophistication of swing 
with the earthiness of the Goan folk song. “The songs were sensuous, funny, 
sexy, sad, sentimental, foot-tapping,” Remo raves. “His songs are peopled by 
unforgettable fictional characters whom we have come to picture as real-life 
acquaintances—Bebdo, Pisso (Madman) andRed Rose are as palpable as personages 
created by a skilled novelist or cartoonist. He has taken us on unforgettable 
journeys toLisboa and Calangute, ” the Goan beach that was being colonised by 
hippies around the time Chris was making his landmark recordings. Some of the 
tunes had been written for the two tiatr shows Perry had produced: Nouro Mhozo 
Deunchar (My Husband, the Devil) and Tum ani Hanv (You and Me). Nouro Mhozo 
Deunchar was Goa’s introduction to Lorna and the 28 performances were an 
unqualified success. The crowds were so large, people waited outside the 
performance tent to hear her voice, one correspondent writes. After the shows, 
people would surge backstage to shake Lorna’s hand. One tune she sang, Saud 
(Peace), became a standard at Goan weddings, and is still sung before the toast 
is raised.Chris Perry’s heart may have been in Goa, but it was Bombay that made 
it possible for him to record his classics. His albums crystalised the 
nostalgia of Bombay’s Goan community, giving voice to their rootlessness—and 
his. Bombay allowed him to soak in jazz and rock and roll, sounds from which he 
crafted his own template. Besides, his Bombay nightclub stints help him 
assemble the tight-knit band that accompanied him to the studio—where his 
Bollywood experience came in very handy. “His recording work meant that, unlike 
the tiatr people, he knew his way around the studio,” notes Ronnie Monserrate. 
“He knew about placing microphones to get the best sound and about mixing.”Most 
of all, there was Lorna. Her rich, sassy voice, everyone’s agreed, is what 
alchemised Chris’s compositions. Their long years together gave him an acute 
sense of her potential and he composed especially for her. “Her nightingale’s 
voice created the magic in rendering the songs effectively,” insists Tomazinho 
Cardoz, the tiatrist who went on to become the speaker of Goa’s legislative 
assembly. Remo, among others, has no doubts about this. “Without Chris there 
would have been no Lorna, and without Lorna there would have been no Chris,” he 
has written.* * *Lorna stopped performing in 1973 after her relationship with 
Chris Perry fell apart. The stories about their break up are hazy on the 
details. In one version, Lorna came home from a vacation to find that the 
apartment they shared had a new lock on the door. Chris’s wife, Lily, is said 
to have served him an ultimatum and he went home to Dabul. But before the 
split, he’d made Lorna sign a bond on stamp paper, prohibiting her for 20 years 
from singing with any other band leader without his permission. He is said to 
have reasoned that Lorna was his creation, so she had no right to perform 
without him. Chris is said to enforced the bond in a muscular fashion. “Once, 
Emiliano got her to sing with him when he was performing at the Flamingo. Chris 
landed up there, chased him all the way down Marine Drive and gave him a black 
eye,” one musician says. “Imagine doing that to Emiliano. He’s such a harmless 
bugger.”Another musician told of how Chris would leap out of his seat at 
Alfred’s restaurant when he saw Lorna go by on her way to the bazaar. She would 
squirm out of his clutches, but was terrified enough to refuse all offers to 
perform again. People who know Lorna say she became an alcoholic. Chris 
eventually moved to Dubai with his family in the mid-’70s, and opened the Dubai 
Music School. The split is said to have left Lorna a wreck. People who know her 
say she became an alcoholic. She worked as a secretary in a firm that sold 
earth moving equipment for a while, but disappeared from the world of show 
business. Every afternoon, though, Goa radio would broadcast the tunes she and 
Chris had recorded and two decades after she’d made her last record, every Goan 
still knew Lorna’s voice. Rumours boiled over: She’s emigrated. To Canada. To 
Australia. No, she’s dead.Goans were still discussing Lorna’s whereabouts a 
quarter of a century after Ronnie Monserrate first backed her at the Venice. 
Now a successful record producer and hot film studio sideman with his brothers, 
Ronnie kept receiving inquiries about Lorna when he toured Goa in 1994 to 
promote a new album. He decided to take a trip to Guzder House to persuade her 
to record again.A woman fresh from the shower with her hair in towel opened the 
door. She sat him down and asked what he wanted. “I want to see Lorna,” he 
explained. She replied, “That’s me.” Ronnie was taken aback. “She looked like a 
wreck. I remembered her as she was in 1971—a total bombshell. But since then, 
she had hit the bottle and become total gone-case.”It took a while to convince 
Lorna that he was serious about getting her into the studio again. She told 
Ronnie that it had been a couple of decades since she’d last performed. “She 
was trying to tell me tangentially that anyone who’d tried to get her to sing 
had got a pasting from Chris Perry,” Ronnie says. But after another visit, 
Ronnie managed to recruit her mother to his cause and win Lorna over. They 
began rehearsing in February 1995, knocking the rust off her voice. “The old 
power was still there,” Ronnie says. “I began to feel good about the project.” 
Ronnie also made a trip to HMV’s vaults to dig out the infamous contract. The 
company’s lawyer assured him that it wasn’t legally binding. Back in Goa, 
Ronnie had recruited Gabriel Gomes to write tunes for the album. “It had been 
Gabru’s dream to have Lorna sing his songs,” Ronnie says. Gabriel set to work 
in a frenzy of cigarettes, building into such a peak that, after composing just 
one track, he took ill and had to be taken to hospital. He died shortly 
thereafter. New composers had to be brought in.When the recording of Hello 
Lorna finally got underway in a Juhu studio five months later, Ronnie would 
travel back across town with her after each session. She was still afraid that 
Chris Perry would accost her.On December 3, 1996, Lorna performed publicly for 
the first time in 24 years at a tourism festival at Miramar beach. The traffic 
was snarled up for kilometres as Goans swarmed to catch a glimpse of the 
legend. State police say that the show drew 300,000 people—the biggest crowd 
since the one that had gathered to celebrate Goa’s liberation from Portuguese 
rule in 1961. At a press conference the day before, Lorna had been mobbed. 
“There was mayhem,” Ronnie recalls. “People ran unto stage and were hugging her 
and kissing her. They were so overjoyed that Lorna was back.” Chris Perry 
landed up at Lorna’s hotel in a last-minute attempt to scare her off. She 
wasn’t in, so he left a note. Ronnie intercepted the missive and didn’t pass it 
on.A few hours later, cheers erupted as Lorna climbed to the stage, looking out 
over a choppy ocean of heads. When the hubbub subsided, Ronnie’s aching piano 
introduction washed over the audience and Lorna began to belt out the opening 
tune from her comeback album. “Aicat mozo tavo,” she urged. “Avaz mozo tumchea 
canar sadonc ishtani ravo portun aicunc mozo tavo.” Hear my voice. Let the 
sound linger in your ears, my friend. Hear my 
voice.http://qz.com/407489/a-story-of-love-longing-and-jazz-in-1960s-bombay/





   


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